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Self-care isn’t about cramming in one more thing. It’s teaching ourselves to pay attention and then make small, meaningful changes

Sometimes, giving yourself permission to pause is the gentlest way to care for your well-being in a busy world. (Representative image: Getty)
Finding time for self-care starts with waking up to how we really spend our time. Most days we drift through our routines on autopilot, schooling ourselves to ignore the bits stolen by checking our phones or squeezing in yet one more task. “The first move is simply to stop, watch how our hours tick away, and ask, “Is this good for me? Does this resonate with what matters to me?” When we notice, daily habits turn from mindless routines to deliberate decisions, giving our calendars room to shift in the direction we really want,” says Dr Taylor Elizabeth, Emotional Intelligence and Etiquette Coach Founder and CEO, The Elegance Advisor.
Next, we craft little rituals on purpose. “Self-care needn’t eat up an hour; in fact, brief acts done mindfully can become healing. Picture a short stroll with only the sound of your footsteps, a five-breath pause in a sunny corner, or eating a meal with fork in hand, not screen. What changes a simple act like this is not the clock, but the awareness we pour into it. Rituals pull us into the moment and remind us that looking after our own selves is not an afterthought, but one of today’s essential projects,” adds Dr Elizabeth.
Boundaries step in as the self-care that takes both guts and clear thinking. Most of our tiredness grows from the silent agreements we make to stretch ourselves to people’s demands. The skill to notice that we keep saying “yes” and ask what that really costs is a type of emotional steadiness we need to practice. A calm, clear “no” is not a rejection; it is a handshake with our own limits. When we guard our time and energy, we hand ourselves the breathing room to replenish, and in that breathing room, we can show up fully for the relationships and projects we truly value.
Finally we must plan self-care the same way we schedule the rest of our lives. We punch in meetings, grocery runs, and deadlines without second thought. Yet, when it comes to rest, exercise, or just quiet time, we tell ourselves it will happen “when I have the time.” The easier and wiser choice is to block that time just as we would block a work appointment. When we treat self-care as a piece of the puzzle and not a leftover crumb, it moves from the to-do list to a part of our natural rhythm.
“Self-care isn’t about cramming in one more thing. It’s teaching ourselves to pay attention and then make small, meaningful changes. By noticing our current patterns, we design rituals that settle us, set boundaries that protect us, and create a schedule that respects both our work and our moments of calm. The goal is to carve out a life that cherishes both accomplishments and peace in the same heartbeat,” believes Dr Elizabeth.

Swati Chaturvedi, a seasoned media and journalism aficionado with over 10 years of expertise, is not just a storyteller; she’s a weaver of wit and wisdom in the digital landscape. As a key figure in News18 Engl…Read More
Swati Chaturvedi, a seasoned media and journalism aficionado with over 10 years of expertise, is not just a storyteller; she’s a weaver of wit and wisdom in the digital landscape. As a key figure in News18 Engl… Read More